Because the beaver isn't just an animal; it's an ecosystem!

Tag: Brock Dolman


No mercyBoth the city and county of Merced has a fairly lethal history with beavers. In our last review of depredation permits they were among the highest tally – even though they are listed as having 0 square miles of water. Apparently old habits die hard.

Merced’s beavers – nuisance or benefit?

Many travelers of the bike paths that run along Merced’s creeks may not be aware of the vibrant ecosystem at their feet, but experts say it’s there.

Aaron Pulver, 54, of Merced said he mostly never thought about the critters that call Black Rascal Creek home until the day he noticed what was clearly a tree that had been gnawed at by beavers. Now, to hear him explain it, he’s got “beaver fever.”

Pulver said he’s never actually seen any beavers in the creek – the mostly nocturnal rodents steer clear of humans during the day. But, now that he’s aware of their presence, he can’t help but see the teeth marks on trees and the dams that stop water from rushing through the creek.

“I’m worried about the flooding,” he said.

Cynthia Pulver, his sister, said she’s worried about loss of trees on the bank. One larger tree, which may have been growing for a couple of decades, fell sometime between Monday night and Tuesday morning. The tree had clearly been chewed up by one or more beavers.

“I’m more concerned with the aesthetics of the creek and the health of the trees,” the 55-year-old said.

The dams are also habitats for other wildlife. In fact, a couple of scientists at the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center in Sonoma County started a campaign called Bring Back the Beaver.

The campaign argues that beavers are a “keystone species” that not only helps other animals, but are beneficial to a thirsty California. Their dams help water to seep into underground aquifers, according to beaver advocates.

Hooray for Brock and Kate! And hoobrockkateray for even discussing the benefits of beaver in an area that’s ground level is actually receeding because of the shrinking aquifer.
But I’m not holding my breath on the outcome. There’s a lot of resistance to beavers in the area, not the least of which is discussed in this article. Check out the outraged letter to the editor a few days later.

Joe Brucia: District’s beaver control effort: A fantasy!

Re “Beavers are nuisance and benefit” (Page 1A, Jan. 7): It is time for the city, county and Merced Irrigation District to develop a written policy on preventing beaver damage along Black Rascal Creek. It is a safety issue for those who enjoy the area. Regardless of our local agency’s assurances, here are the facts:

▪ Black Rascal Creek flowing through the city (and portions of the county) is actually a canal. The real creek is diverted into Bear Creek, just east of Kibby Road at Fairfield Canal.

▪ Water flows into the city portion of the creek through irrigation pipes during the summer and from street drainage in winter.

▪ Entrances to culverts along the creek are often dammed by beavers.

▪ Large beaver dams create ponds of stagnant water each spring and, if there was no significant irrigation season, into the summer.

▪ High water from beaver ponds causes erosion damage to creek banks.

▪ Trees partially chewed are a hazard to walkers and especially to kids playing in the area.

▪ For flood control, the city removes a dam or clears a culvert. However, the beaver remains to rebuild.

▪ Within city limits, beavers are not beneficial to Black Rascal Creek.

▪ In the city, responsibility for beaver control is not clearly communicated.

▪ The city, county, MID and MCAG have not provided the public with any written information on their procedures or policies related to dam or beaver damage.

Let’s hope that our local governments can work together to devise a plan, communicated to the public, to solve the problem. It would be appropriate to request public input.

Joe Brucia, Merced

Nicely defended Joe. Obviously no time was wasted before sitting down at the computer to defend your freedom from beavers. I tried to look him up and found that ten of his letters have been published fairly recently, including one that says lawns shouldn’t be allowed between the sidewalk and the street – because of the drought. And if we’re wondering how reasonable Joe is we have to ask ourselves, “who would take the time to write a letter about meridian strips?” (And before you answer YOU, remember I have a fairly narrow focus these days.)

So Joe’s that guy why rambles at every council meeting whether he cares about the issue or not and once in a great while makes sense. We can discard that letter, but you should really read the comments after it. One of them is just brilliant!


Great work from our beaver friends in Sonoma, featuring RUSTY’S amazing beaver photos!

Beavers: A Potential Missing Link in California’s Water Future

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Beaver kit Napa: Rusty Cohn

The landscape desperately needs rain.

It could also use beavers, according to ecologists who say the near eradication of Castor canadensis from parts of the West in the 19th century has magnified the effects of California’s worst dry spell in history.

“Beavers create shock absorption against drought,” says Brock Dolman, a scientist in Sonoma County who wants to repopulate coastal California with the big lumberjacking rodents.
By gnawing down trees and building dams, beavers create small reservoirs. What follows, scientists say, is a series of trickle-down benefits: The water that might otherwise have raced downstream to the sea, tearing apart creek gullies and washing away fish, instead gets holed up for months behind the jumbles of twigs and branches. In this cool, calm water, fish — like juvenile salmon — thrive.

Meanwhile, the water percolates slowly into the ground, recharging near-surface aquifers and keeping soils hydrated through the dry season. Entire streamside meadows, Dolman says, may remain green all summer if beavers are at work nearby. Downstream of a beaver pond, some of the percolated water may eventually resurface, helping keep small streams flowing and fish alive.

A great great piece of pro-beaver writing from a big enough source to get picked up by Gizmodo and Huffpo today. (You should see the miles of beaver puns…sheesh) Perfect science from Brock and friends, and great illustrations by Rusty. I’m not sure why, if it’s using Napa photos, it doesn’t mention Napa beavers or how they’re welcomed by the city and improving habitat. Or you know that OTHER city where beavers were allowed to coexist and made a creek rich with wildlife right in the middle of town.  Ahem.

But never mind, this is a GOOD piece. In fact it has been 8 amazing great days of beaver news. What’s the explanation? Utah, Idaho, Oregon and now California. That’s got to be worth a toast. Here’s my favorite part:

“Beavers impact almost every aspect of the watershed,” says Andersen. “They lower stream temperatures, retain sediment, create refuge for fish, and create groundwater percolation that reappears downstream later in the year. When beavers disappeared, streams became channelized, we lost our flows earlier in the summer, and temperatures went up.”

While rain is sorely needed throughout California, the absence of beaver infrastructure could make the landscape less able to rebound should a more generous hydrological period resume. Dolman explains that, without woody debris in the creek gullies to slow water down, the land has less opportunity to soak it up when rain does fall. The result is raging floods in the winter and, once summer comes, a watershed that rapidly goes dry again.

“Losing beavers is a double whammy for a watershed,” Dolman explains. “You get exacerbated flooding, erosion and sediment, and reduced groundwater recharge, in the winter. Then, in the summer, you have land that dries up faster because you didn’t get that winter recharge. We’ve created a landscape much less resilient to drought.”

Amen. 


We finally got an article about the flow device removal, which is less wonderful. In addition to dutifully reporting every bogus thing the city has to say about their bank destabilization project, it also (after ALL THESE YEARS) demonstrates it  still doesn’t understand how it worked.

Martinez: You can’t ‘deceive’ Mother Nature if heavy rains are coming

MARTINEZ — The prospect of heavy El Nio-influenced rains this winter has East Bay cities stocking up on sandbags and already monitoring storm drains to keep them clear.

But in Martinez, there’s a “beaver deceiver” to remove.

City crews worked this week to remove this device, which includes a plastic pipe that channels water under the beavers’ first main dam in Alhambra Creek, between Escobar Street and Marina Vista.

With Martinez’s famous beaver community keeping a low profile lately, and vivid memories of the damage a flooded creek created downtown in January 1998, the time to remove the pipeline seems right.

The device — essentially a pipeline with large anchoring devices — was installed in 2008 to encourage the beavers to choose that location for their dam rather than build ones in other places. The idea is that the water level behind the dam would never rise too high, with creek water instead flowing through the pipe under the dam and downstream. The beavers were convinced, at least for a while, that their dam was effective and that water was not getting through.

Sigh. Where to even start? It’s not a beaver deceiver, it didn’t encourage the beavers to build in a new place, and it wasn’t necessary to remove it. The city lies and has always lied to justify their decisions. But oh well, after 8 years I have learned that the media is like a powerful flying dragon.  You can’t teach or influence it in any way. You can’t make it better. Not really. But sometimes it travels big distances very quickly, and that’s incredibly useful. It has no harness that you can gently tug to guide them.

You can only hang on.


Great news from our beaver friends! I love opening the paper to read an article about beaver advocacy that isn’t in Martinez. We just need 100’s more of these. It’s a big state.

Sherri Hasenfas
Sheri Hartstein Sierra Wildlife Coalition

Beaver population thriving at Lake Tahoe thanks to local volunteers

TAHOE-TRUCKEE, Calif. — Beavers at Lake Tahoe are faring better than they were just a few years ago, thanks to the efforts of Sherry Guzzi and her posse of volunteers, collectively known as the Sierra Wildlife Coalition.

 As is the case with many people who become passionate defenders of wildlife, Sherry’s involvement began with the death of a beaver family that had become dear to her and countless other residents and visitors to Kings Beach during the fall of 2010.

This family of four beavers, two adults and two young, had built themselves a lodge in Griff Creek, which runs near Highway 267 in Kings Beach, before flowing beneath the road and into Lake Tahoe.

Obviously, we can’t allow homes, roads or businesses to be flooded so what is to be done? Sadly, in this instance, authorities decided to remove the lodge and kill the beavers.

Even more sadly, this particular dam did not threaten any structures, as the dam was only one foot high and any resulting overflow would have gone into the nearby culvert.

 The killing of the beavers did not sit well with the humans who had become enamored with the animals from watching their daily activities.

 Sherry, along with co-founder Mary Long, created the Sierra Wildlife Coalition with the purpose of sierrawildlifeserving as champions of wildlife, and particularly beavers.

Ooooh I love a good creation story! I remember the Griff creek beavers especially because Worth A Dam donated our first beaver management scholarship towards fixing the problem and our own Lory went to Tahoe to educate support. Ahh memories. Seems like yesterday.

sherryandted
Sherry and Ted Guzzi in their native habitat.

Go read the whole thing which ends with a touching poem by Mary’s daughter. SWC under Sherry’s leadership has done outstanding beaver work, with Ted installing flow devices, teams exhibiting and educating at events, and all making sure beaver decisions are made with the right information. Sherry just gave her first beaver presentation for the public at Taylor Creek the day before the beaver festival! It was extremely well received and she still managed to drive down and exhibit in Martinez the next morning. Now that’s dedication!

It’s not only in Tahoe where beaver friends are at work. Nearby in Napa they’re busy too.

‘Wild Napa’ lecture series to focus on beavers

The “Wild Napa” lecture series continues this month with a special presentation on beavers. Hosted by the Napa County Resource Conservation District, the event will be held next Wednesday, Sept. 9.

 Coverbrockkateed will be the history and ecology of beavers and how they are helping urban and rural communities across the state to restore watersheds, recover endangered species, and increase climate change resiliency. Brock Doman and Kate Lundquist of the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center will share their research to re-evaluate the historic range of beaver in California, and discuss how you can contribute to the Bring Bakateworkingck the Beaver campaign.

Optional guided tour of the active beaver dams on Napa Creek. To join this tour, meet behind the Firefighter’s Museum at 1201 Main St.

Following the tour, the talk will start at 7 p.m. at The Black and White Collective (enter through Napa Bookmine at 964 Pearl St.). Attendance is free and no registration is needed.

Napa is in for a treat. And Napa beavers should get ready to  have their virtues extolled. I think Rusty and Robin will be there for sure. And Cheryl said she was planning to try and attend. It’s a great opportunity to spread the word and learn about beavers from the folks that are working closely with Fish and Wildlife to nudge our beaver policies forward. Just in case you can’t make it, here’s a nice introduction to Brock, who has a dynamic, biologic and stream oriented speaking style that you just can’t mistake.

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IMG_0348Yesterday I received a very interesting email from Pam our fiscal manager at ISI who said that she and Loren had attended the fundraising breakfast for Daily Acts where they had been surprised to see our friend Brock Dolman on stage dressed in a beaver costume and talking about the good beavers do. She snapped this shot with her phone and you can see the beaver’d Brock wayyyyy at the back. She also said there was video of the event and we should get it soon.

You might remember Pam helped at the festival and trekked to our planning meeting beforehand. She had been such a help in our transition aboard that when she admired my wildbryde keystone species charm necklace I had given it to her. She wore it to this event and guess what happened?

And your name is quite well known. I wore my beautiful charm necklace, of course, and a little girl there told me she made her own at the Beaver Festival! Several other adults had also attended. …I am happy to be associated with your fine organization 🙂

How cool is that? Someone wearing our charms  was spotted by a child who had made them herself! And former attendees of the festival were at the breakfast promoting our good work! Now that’s an awesome coincidence. And it’s what I call being surrounded by beavers!

More good news came from Sherry Guzzi in Tahoe. You’ll remember that she and Ted had installed flow devices at Taylor Creek where they had been battling beavers for decades and ripping out dams to protect nonnative kokonee salmon. They had waged an epic [and I do mean epic] campaign to win hearts and minds and were finally begrudgingly given the go ahead “try one” in a back channel. Of course this worked like a charm so they were granted permission to try one on the main channel. Guess what happened?

 I want to personally thank you so very much for all your hard work, coordination, communication, perseverance and good humor. It has been a pleasure working with you to create more harmony between the visiting public and beaver at the Visitors Center!

 I am excited about the other opportunities to collaborate that we’ve been exploring. Your assistance in addressing beaver concerns at other locations in the Basin will be warmly welcomed. 

 

Is it possible that in a million years I never expected this response and I simultaneously have imagined no other? Fantastic work Ted and Sherry! And everyone else who helped nudge, wheedle, persuade, cajole and shame this into happening. Finally the Taylor Creek beavers can live in peace!

_________________________________________________

And a final note of warm remembrance for car guru and radio humorist Tom Margliozzi, who  died yesterday from complications due to Alzheimer’s. Everyone remembers his infectious laugh and his playful advice but I don’t think that was his real talent. Tom and his brother were both MIT graduates. They were realists who loved science and solving problems. Tom was educated without being elitist. Regional without being exclusionary. Populist without be simplistic. Traditional without being dated and funny without being mean. In three minutes Tom could connect with a Lexus driver in NYC, a Ford pickup driver in Alabama, or an Honda driver in Chicago. There are a handful of people alive in our partisan world that still have that skill. He perfected it.

He is remembered on this website with his badge of honor. The brass rat.

mitringtopquid rides? mutato nomine de te fabula narratur
(Why do you laugh? Change the name and the story is told of you)

2014 Badger Spirit awards are presented to:

Occidental Arts and Ecology Center and WATER Institute in Occidental, CA, for their work in conserving natural resources, sustainable agriculture, respect for the environment, and the WATER Institute’s national outreach to “Bring Back the Beaver” and restoring Coho Salmon to watersheds programs. More info: www.oaec.org, and oaec.org/water-institute.

Worth a Dam, Martinezbeavers.org, based in Martinez, CA, for conservation, outreach and educational programs on behalf of Beavers in the United States and stewardship and protection of the Martinez Beavers in Martinez, CA. More info: Martinezbeavers.org

sfbaywildlife.info, an innovative and contemporary internet resource, for San Francisco Bay Area information about wildlife, places, activities and resources. More info: sfbaywildlife.info

Many thanks to Susan and the Paula Lane Action Network for recognizing beavers with this years awards.  We even got mention in the local Press Democrat.

 Award for Bring Back the Beaver program

The group Worth a Dam which also works to educate the public about the value of beavers in restoration and conservation of natural resources was also recognized. The group holds an annual Beaver Festival in Martinez where beavers have become a tourist attraction as well as providing a habitat for other wildlife..

 The much maligned animal has proved its worth in preserving valuable salmon runs, and in water conservation. Bring Back the Beaver and Worth a Dam are working to educate the public and change state policies about the beaver which date back to 1942 and are founded on inaccurate data.

susanA beaver-maniac like me is thrilled to accept the honor. I first wrote Susan close to 8 years ago when she was a writer for Sonoma Press Blog and had written about our beavers. When I learned about her badger affinity I told her that through a weird series of coincidences my earliest fiercely loved toy had been an actual stuffed badger the neighbor had thrown over the fence. I had loved its soft fur and sharp claws, and imagined that its badger spirit had shaped my adult life, making me unwilling to give up on much of anything including the Martinez beavers.

Thank you PLAN for recognizing the badger spirit in us! And we look forward to badgering people about beavers for years to come!

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